Author: Michael Hallisey

  • The Addy Opens at Proctors Theatre

    “You should know that as of five o’clock last night there were still lights and speakers still being hung,” said Proctors CEO Philip Morris at a Wednesday morning press conference to announce the opening of the Adeline Graham Theatrical Training and Innovation Center on Nov. 29 (The Addy for short) “In fact, you might even smell the dust burning off of the LEDs.”

    Named after the philanthropist and longtime supporter of Proctors Theatre, the third floor space of the complex now houses a 100-seat theatre, multi-use classrooms, a media lab, a dance studio and a variety of amenities Proctors expects will serve more than 500 students and 10,000 patrons annually.

    Proctors CEO Philip Morris speaks with visitors during the unveiling of The Addy on November 29

    “There is nothing for us as exciting as opening The Addy,” said Morris. “This is as laser focused as our mission gets — bringing together education, entertainment and economic development in one ‘wow’ package. We are beyond proud.”

    The Addy is already in use by the Empire State Youth Orchestra’s CHIME program, serving 60 musicians from local elementary and middle schools. But, in January, The School of the Performing Arts at Proctors will host more than 200 students in weekly classes, including the middle school-based Acting Academy and the high school-oriented TheatreTECH.

    Built as part of a larger capital campaign, the $2.2 million project was supported by grants from Empire State Development and the Capital Region Economic Development Council, Schenectady County, Schenectady Metroplex Development Authority and the Wright Family Foundation.

    “Philanthropy was such an important part of Adeline’s life,” said her niece, Heather Ward, now chair of The Wright Family Foundation, Inc. “She shared this passion with so many organizations, and she dedicated so much of her time and energy to Proctors because she really understood the importance of education, training and community education through the arts.”

    With the Workforce Development Institute and TheatreTECH, The Addy will provide participants apprenticeship programs, training and certification that will allow them to work in a variety of performing arts careers. The performance space will also add another distinct venue to Proctors—serving as art house cinema, concert hall and theatrical stage.

    A classroom currently used by the Empire State Youth Orchestra’s CHIME program at The Addy.

    “Any time you are willing to affect youth, you have an opportunity to change the world,” said Arnold Will, deputy regional director of Empire State Development. “In this case here, it’s really what we’re doing. We’re glad to be a part of taking a vacant facility, renovating it, being a part of the revitalization of downtown Schenectady, and we wish our continued support for Philip and continued success of this project.”

    Ray Gillen, chair of Metroplex, said the new creativity hub should only help Schenectady as a whole, as it adds another venue to attract visitors to the city.

    “This new venue completes the renovation of the cherished Carl Company, one of the last undeveloped spaces on State Street,” he said. “The third floor now features performing and exhibit space, including a versatile 100-seat theatre that will draw more people to downtown Schenectady.”

    This article was originally published by The Spot 518 and is the property of Spotlight Newspapers in Albany, N.Y., and appears as a special to NYS Music. TheSpot518 and NYS Music work in partnership to provide readers with in-depth coverage on the local music scene in the Capital District and New York state, respectively. For more, visit TheSpot518.com.

  • Falling short on a chance to open Albany’s largest block party, The Late Shift thrives nonetheless

    Wednesday night gigs guarantee small crowds. The Late Shift was one of four bands to play Jupiter Hall on what was the final round of Wednesday night shows 102.7 WEQX organized for a weekly Battle of the Bands. The vertical string of mid-week nights strung across the month of August to determine who would open its annual Pearlpalooza music festival in Albany that summer.

    There is, of course, an exception to every rule of thought. It wasn’t just a “battle” amongst musicians fighting for recognition: each band was tasked with the near impossible task of coaxing its fans to come out for support. Thursday mornings are not the time to be nursing a hangover, either from alcohol consumption, sleep deprivation or both. It’s the type of dedication to their bands that fans pay forward with sloppy TPS reports and copious amounts of coffee.

    The Late Shift consists of four guys who graduated from Shaker a few years back. They messed around with some instruments in high school and about five years ago, band frontman Scotty Somerville said they flipped the switch to become the group they are today. That band has cultivated a following that now allows them to host an annual Halloween party on the Captain J.P. Morgan Cruise and a regular “Thanksgiving Eve” gig at The Hollow Bar and Kitchen.

    When Scotty, Mike Davies, Jake Lester, and Sean Murphy took to the Jupiter Hall stage, a relative swell of people crossed the floor towards the stage — relative in terms that a bulge of bodies from the approximately 80 in attendance started dancing. In a competition where the crowd was asked to submit hand written ballots to decide the winner, the proverbial hat had been tipped. Chanting and singing along to the songs, the favorite seemed to have already been named with still two bands yet to perform. But, it wasn’t so.

    Ultimately, Hasty Page won over the crowd as the final act of the evening. The three-piece band out of Albany (has since been playing with a fourth band member) earned the spoils of kicking off the Capital City’s biggest block party of the year. But, it turns out that oft-quoted line by Ricky Bobby “If you ain’t first, you’re last,” isn’t true.

    “Sometimes it’s a humbling experience to go into something very confidently and not necessarily have the results you want,” said Somerville, who added he and his bandmates didn’t walk into the room with the expectation of winning. He acknowledged that the pool of bands they were up against, like Hasty Page, were already “more up-and-coming than us.” [But,] we actually wound up getting a lot of great exposure from it. It really started our relationship with a lot of people.”

    Along with the exposure to additional fans and WEQX, Somerville said Greg Bell of Guthrie Bell Productions was in attendance, too. Bell is responsible for bringing in many of the regional acts who perform at the Palace Theatre, Cohoes Music Hall and The Hollow. Somerville said the performances at the Battle of the Bands impressed Bell enough to have The Late Shift open for Jimkata’s farewell performance at The Hollow in October.

    Jimkata is one of those regional bands with the reputation of working hard, performing more than 150 shows a year. After several years together, the band’s last album In Motion dropped last year, Jimkata decided to call it quits. The opportunity to play with them, Somerville said, was inspiring.

    “It’s funny whenever you get an opportunity to play with a band having a lot of success, whether that success is coming to an end or it’s just starting,” he said. “Just speaking with them, we’ve done a lot of things similar as bands, we know a lot of similar people. It’s amazing to find people who are having a lot of success and see that they do a lot of the things you are, it’s definitely inspiring.”

    Flash forward to the day before Thanksgiving. Another Wednesday night gig. Another surprisingly large crowd. The Late Shift is headlining its “Thanksgiving Eve” party, a show they’ve put together now for four years at arguably one of the hottest joints in a hot local music scene. “There are more and more incredible acts popping up everywhere,” said Somerville. “It seems like on any Saturday, you’ll see several great shows that you actually have to pick and choose between what you can actually go see. To me, although it fluctuates… I see the scene as hot as it’s ever been right now.” And, on an evening before fans go to see family for the holidays, a vibrant crowd packed the Hollow to see The Late Shift, along with local hip-hop artists Wavy Cunningham and DJ Mercy, and The Other Brothers, a funk rock band out of New Paltz. No TPS reports or college papers due the following day so the crowd let loose. Late into the night, The Late Shift lead the crowd into a sing-along to Aerosmith’s “I Don’t Want to Miss a Thing.” It’s an obvious favorite, but it lends something of an anthem. A mid-week crowd wishing it can “stay lost in this moment,” dedicating themselves to both a band and music scene on the rise.

    Plans are already in motion for 2018. Somerville said the band has two more gigs planned this month, including a New Year’s Eve show that’s still being worked out. The band already has the bridge work laid out to follow-up last year’s Fork & Knives.

    “We can’t put a date on it, but there’s definitely some stuff going on behind the scenes,” said Somerville. “There’s some new songs, and some new approaches for some of the songs, too. Some new styles. All within our wheelhouse, but kind of exploring a few different things. There’s some stuff we’re really excited about.”

    This article was originally published by The Spot 518 and is the property of Spotlight Newspapers in Albany, N.Y., and appears as a special to NYS Music. TheSpot518 and NYS Music work in partnership to provide readers with in-depth coverage on the local music scene in the Capital District and New York state, respectively. For more, visit TheSpot518.com.

  • Proctors Announces Capital Records Live

    Capital Records Live, to be held on March 23 at the GE Theatre at Proctors, is a new model for local music entertainment. Presented in association with WAIX, “Albany’s Independent Experience,” the series’ debut performance will feature six of the region’s most popular bands playing classic songs of The Beatles.

    OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

    The first act in the inaugural show will find the Bryan Brundige Collective, Clear Mind, Eastbound Jesus, Girl Blue, Let’s Be Leonard and Wild Adriatic offering self-chosen selections from 1968’s The Beatles, better known as The White Album.

    The second act will challenge the same groups, with Proctors and WAIX 106.1 determining which songs the band will perform, all from 1967’s groundbreaking, multiple Grammy Award-winning album Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band.

    Whether you’re a fan of local artists, wanting to support local music or a Beatles buff who can’t miss these iconic albums performed in a whole new way, Capital Records Live will be the place to be.

    Capital Records Live is a planned annual concert featuring a variety of local and regional artists performing a classic album live in concert. Its mission is to promote the local music scene by introducing artists to new audiences, fostering new musical relationships and offering a performance opportunity in a world class environment. Audiences, in turn, are treated to a local “All Star” night of music featuring timeless favorites.

    Tickets for Capital Records Live, $25, are available at the Box Office at Proctors, 432 State Street, Schenectady; by phone at (518) 346-6204; and online at proctors.org.

    This article, originally published by The Spot 518, is property of Spotlight Newspapers in Albany, N.Y, and appears as a special to NYS Music. TheSpot518 and NYS Music work in partnership to provide readers with in-depth coverage of the local music scene in the Capital District and New York State, respectively. For more, visit TheSpot518.com.

  • ‘Pint-Sized Powerhouse’ Moriah Formica is Still Just a Shaker Student

    THE VOICE — Season:13 — Pictured: Moriah Formica — (Photo by: Paul Drinkwater/NBC)

    While her talent was called “unfair” by Blake Shelton and she’s currently being mentored by Miley Cyrus on NBC’s “The Voice,” her fifth grade music teacher, Camille Wing remembers Moriah Formica before she became the rock star she is today.

    “She was very quiet,” Wing said.

    Her talents on guitar were a secret until the chorus was preparing for a concert. Some of Formica’s friends mentioned to Wing that Formica could play “Eye of the Tiger,” a song they were rehearsing, on the guitar.

    “I asked her if she would be willing to bring her guitar in and play it for us,” Wing said. “Her dad brought it in before school and she played it perfectly. She definitely knew what she was doing.”

    Wing asked Formica to lend her ability at many points after that. Formica accompanied her sixth grade chorus in “Stray Cat Strut,” and then sang a “beautiful” rendition of Alicia Keys’ “Fallin’.” Formica was even asked to sing a solo at her eighth grade graduation.

    “I haven’t asked many people to [sing solos],” Wing said.

    Fast forward to now, and Formica is a strong contender on season 13 of “The Voice.” Her blind audition performance of “Crazy on You” by Heart got the attention of all four judges, ultimately earning her a coveted spot on Team Miley Cyrus.

    “I chose to play Heart because it is classic rock,” Formica said. “One of the reasons why I decided to go on to ‘The Voice’ is because of the lack of true rock singers. Ann Wilson is one of my favorite vocalists.”

    Formica has powered through each week of “The Voice” so far, impressing the judges with her range and vocal control. Despite the success, she’s still at Shaker High School, taking classes and moving on with her education.

    “I’m truly enjoying all of this, but it’s so much work,” she said. “I have school all day, but then I come home and there are so many opportunities that I have to address. I don’t like ignoring anyone.”

    Her father and manager, Josh Formica, agrees with her.

    “Sometimes it’s hard for her. She gets home from school and I have to ask the typical dad questions—‘how was your day,’ ‘did you learn anything,’” he said. “But then I have to follow up with things like ‘you have 120 really nice comments that you should probably check out,’ or ‘we have received an opportunity from here, what would you like to do?’ I then have to transition back into dad mode and make sure she’s getting her homework done and keeping up with school stuff.”

    Luckily, Formica said that the school has been supportive of this journey since the beginning. They have helped the tutors get whatever material they needed and made sure that Formica’s education stays as steady as possible.

    “School definitely gets in the way sometimes, but I could not be more grateful for the support of Shaker and what they’ve done for me since the beginning,” she said.

    North Colonie Central School District Superintendent Joseph Corr said Formica’s work ethic is indicative of what the district hopes to instill in its students.

    “While Moriah has such tremendous natural talent, I don’t think people realize the amount of time and work that goes on behind the scenes. She works so hard and we are very proud of her,” Corr said. “We watch ‘The Voice’ every week and root her on. She’s our hometown hero. Watching her perform with such power at only 16-years-old is so inspiring.”

    Shaker High School Principal Richard Murphy said Shaker has felt the craze around Formica’s newfound fame.

    “Moriah has always been known for her voice, so it wasn’t a surprise to see this happen,” Murphy said. “She is a humble, polite young lady and it’s nice to see her get attention. It’s created a buzz in our school and it’s wonderful.”

    Formica said her musical influences include Aerosmith, Evanescence, Halestorm and In This Moment. She has met Lzzy Hale from Halestorm, who Formica said was supportive. While she’s met a few members of Evanescence, she has yet to meet lead singer Amy Lee. She hopes to meet Steven Tyler someday.

    “Aerosmith was my first true love,” she said. “My room is called Aeroville because of how many posters I have around.”

    Although she won’t know the results of “The Voice” until the rest of the world does in November, Formica said that a loss will not deter her from making music.

    “I will continue doing what I’m doing; I want to make music, perform, release albums,” she said. “‘The Voice’ has given me the exposure that I need to keep going.”

    And the proudest people of all? The ones who have coached her along the way.

    “Moriah comes alive when she performs,” Wing said. “She has that special something that I believe will carry her far and make her dreams come true.  I am thoroughly enjoying seeing it happen.”

    Her father agrees.

    “She’s been performing, and I’ve been managing her, since she was 12,” he said. “Seeing her have this huge stage is incredibly validating and rewarding.”

    This article was originally published by The Spot 518. is property of Spotlight Newspapers in Albany, N.Y., and appears as a special to NYS Music. TheSpot518 and NYS Music work in partnership to provide readers with in-depth coverage on the local music scene in the Capital District and New York state, respectively. For more, visit TheSpot518.com.

  • Holly Brown to step down as executive director of Palace Performing Arts

    The curtain is rising on exciting changes for the Palace Theatre, but its top executive is exiting stage left at the end of the month. In a prepared statement released Thursday, Oct. 19, Holly Brown stated she will move on from her position after five years at the helm of the Palace Performing Arts Center. Susan Rosko Fogarty will step in as executive director.

    “It has been my privilege and my pleasure to run this beautiful and beloved theatre,” stated Brown, adding praise to the Palace staff. “There is a saying in this industry that you are only as good as ‘what walks on the stage.’ My goal has been to not only increase the number of event nights at the theatre, but to bring in some of the biggest names in the business.”

    The Palace has more than doubled its featured events, from 77 in 2009-10 to 170 in 2015-16, during Brown’s five years as executive director. The move comes just months following the PPAC’s acquisition of the 86-year old theatre from the City of Albany, which paved the way for a $65 million expansion and renovation project for the Capital City venue.

    PPAC Chairman Alan Goldberg credited Brown for the Palace’s reputation for its “diverse, outstanding and high-caliber programming.”

    “Under Holly’s direction, the [PPAC] is known for its diverse, outstanding and high-caliber programming which has translated into financial success.”

    Fogarty has already been named as Brown’s replacement. Goldberg cited Fogarty’s 25-plus years of arts and business experience within the same statement. Fogarty previously served in various sales and marketing roles for V2 Records and Sony/BMG. She has also worked as a leader in the financial district, and most recently as senior vice president of the Capital District YMCA.

    This article was originally published by The Spot 518 and is the property of Spotlight Newspapers in Albany, N.Y., and appears as a special to NYS Music. TheSpot518 and NYS Music work in partnership to provide readers with in-depth coverage on the local music scene in the Capital District and New York state, respectively. For more, visit TheSpot518.com.

  • Sydney Worthley Drops Debut Album to Positive Reviews, Earns Respect in Local Scene

    Sydney Worthley is walking down the hall before she is stopped by a friend who confesses, “I’ve had that song stuck in my head the entire day.”

    That song is “One Two Three,” an earworm off of Worthley’s own 14-track CD Strong which dropped last month through Ambassador Music Group.

    The Voorheesville teenager is aggressively pushing out into the local music scene. She’s performed several gigs throughout the Capital District in the past several months, highlighted by a show at Albany’s Tulip Festival in May and a headlining act at Jupiter Hall to celebrate the release of Strong.

    Since it’s release in September, the title track has received play on local alternative and Americana stations, including 88.3 WVCR-FM, where Worthley has already earned respect from its prominent on-air personality.

    “Her charm and poise were evident,” said Vito Ciccarelli, WVCR radio personality. Ciccarelli interviewed Sydney Worthley for his show and he said he was impressed within two minutes. “You don’t generally see that in performers that young. When she performed live, I said to myself — this is the real deal. Reminded me of Moriah Formica… just in the way she didn’t stumble, and let her knowledge and charm take over the interview.”

    In a NYS Music album review, writer Julia Wolfe describes Worthley’s writing technique as similar to Taylor Swift, another artist whose music career started in earnest at the age of 14. Like Swift, the topics in which Worthley touches upon transcend into more mature interpretations of self-awareness, love and death.

    A dedication to Worthley’s grandmothers is scribed on the front of the CD’s lyrics booklet; “two women who exemplified what it means to be strong.” Dorothy Contreras and Sherry Worthley both died of cancer within four months. The young artist took to writing.

    “After that, I had started writing about things I had experienced,” said Sydney, “and that’s what this entire album is about.”

    Shauna Worthley, Sydney’s mother, said her daughter has been determined to strike out onto the world since performing in front of her first crowd at 9.

    “Any parent thinks that their daughter is extremely gifted,” said Shauna. She and her husband decided to gift Sydney with a guitar for her 9th birthday after showing an interest in playing music. Three months of lessons were followed by a performance in front of more than 100 people at her school’s talent show. “And, [she] came off the stage bawling. She was just so happy. Throughout all of this, she just wanted more.”

    Last Thanksgiving, Sydney sat before the piano and started writing.

    In 20 minutes, she had the words down for “Better Than You.”

    “It’s No. 8, which is my favorite number,” said Sydney. The track that contains biting lyrics from a jilted lover is also her favorite. Which, perhaps, draws another comparison to Swift. “I don’t think they know it’s about them. It’s about certain people in particular. Not the entire song is about them. Sometimes little bits and pieces are about that person, and then I go off and make the song bigger.”

    In addition to the 14 songs debuted on Strong, Sydney has 18 more written down. A lyrical chain of subjects that all began with her first song “Wrong Way.” It’s a song Sydney said was initially difficult to perform in front of audiences. The last track on her CD covers the topic of bullying. She admits to once feeling like the “odd person out.” Struggling through the fear of sharing her songs to strangers helped her realize that others could relate to her words.

    “This is what I want my career to be,” said Sydney. “I want it to go as big as it can.” Writing down places to play such as the Times Union Center, “because that’s a big dream of mine. World tours and most of what other musicians want to do.”

    She already has someone in radio convinced.

    “Sydney is the whole package,” said Ciccarelli. “Amazing talent, wonderful songwriter, and an engaging young lady. Having worked with many young acts over the years, I see her achieving great things in the future.

    This article was originally published by The Spot 518.

  • Kyle Albano goes Unconventional to get his Name out to the World

    “There’s a tremendous difference in what social media has done for me in {the past} couple of years,” said Kyle Albano, who has taken a different approach to promoting his music since dropping his second album Kings with Queens in June.

    Albano is a student of the internet as much as he is a graduate of The College of Saint Rose’s prestigious music program, where he earned both his bachelor’s and master’s degrees. By day, he’s a music teacher at Albany High School, teaching sound production and music composition. At night, he’s working on his own music from his one-bedroom apartment in Guilderland.

    Kings with Queens dropped in June. To promote it, Albano hit the keyboard. His computer keyboard. Like most musicians, he’s a one-man show composing music with one hand and shooting out emails to people throughout the music industry with the other. However, the level of his multitasking is not that simple. He is consciously taking steps promoting a brand — #kylealbano — and doing so through multiple channels outside the norm.

    “I don’t really gig out too much anymore, because it wasn’t doing me well,” said Albano. For his 2012 release Poor Love, Albano released a video on YouTube and hit the stage several times a week. Despite his efforts, he said he wasn’t getting the results. The video received 800 hits. When sometimes looking at playing a local venue on a Wednesday evening, promising the potential for small turnouts, he said, “It wasn’t worth my time.”

    Time is a concept Albano is conscious of, but not beholden to, while he works on his music. He gets to work whenever the inspiration hits him. For one track on Kings with Queens, Albano was struck with an epiphany and went to work at the personal studio he converted from his apartment’s dining room. The sound from his Yamaha HS-7 speakers reverberated throughout the apartment complex. “Sometimes I turned them up too high and they rumble,” he said. It was 10 p.m.

    “So, I got a nasty [complaint],” said Albano. He answered a knock on the door to find his neighbor, in his pajamas, with a copy of the lease in his hand, reminding the musician he was breaking the rules. “And, then, I kept doing it,” he said. “Now that the album is done, we’re in a better part. But, yes. I’ve gotten some complaints.”

    Outside from his neighbors, the pop-punk sounds of Kings with Queens has been well received. He’s not getting on stage just yet. (Though, he said, there are plans for a show in October.) Nonetheless, Albano’s pop-punk sound is played across local radio on WEQX and WEXT.

    “Someone once told me that every song [on Kings with Queens] is different, but inclusive,” said Albano, who is receptive to people interpreting his music for themselves. “Whenever I write a song, it’s however I feel. Any artist is going to write like that. What they’re feeling that day. Hopefully, I try to shed light within the songs. You do your dark times and high times. But, if someone just listens to the song and interprets it in their way, and it helps them… When I listen to a song, I [may] not know what they’re talking about, but I know what that song means to me. Sometimes, it gets me through certain days. … I want somebody to listen. And, if someone listens to that, and it helps them in any fashion, I did my job.”

    In the five years between albums, Albano said he plotted out a plan to increase exposure. The end result is a layered strategy that includes hooking up with Made in Truth Clothing. As he models the Albany-based company’s clothing line he shares its brand on social media. On Albano’s home computer, he has a word document with several of his most effective hashtags for Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. In August, just two months after dropping Kings with Queens, Albano doubled the amount of hits on his promotional video, compared to that from “Poor Love.” He’s also started making connections with people from larger record companies.

    “There’s a tremendous difference in what social media has done for me in [the past] couple of years,” said Albano.

    The students Albano teaches even catch him on the internet and ask him how they can follow in his footsteps. He tells them to keep on working. Build a fanbase. Read. Watch interviews of artists on YouTube and see how they did it. Just learn as much as you can, and apply it. But how it all will end, the teacher has no answers.

    “Right now, this social media thing has kept me up above and on the flow,” he said. “I think I’m just doing it the right way this time.”

    This article was originally published by The Spot 518 and is the property of Spotlight Newspapers in Albany, N.Y., and appears as a special to NYS Music. TheSpot518 and NYS Music work in partnership to provide readers with in-depth coverage on the local music scene in the Capital District and New York state, respectively. For more, visit TheSpot518.com.

  • Josh Casano traded away life in the kitchen for time with family and music

    Have you had a taste of what Josh Casano can cook?

    Standing in front of an audience, the man loops an elaborate arrangement of ingredients, all with the use of his voice, his guitar and a delay unit at his feet.

    josh casanoThe chef-turned-musician ran a few kitchens in his time before the life changing events of meeting his wife, Sarah, and the eventual discussion of starting a family. Suddenly, aspirations of becoming the next Ric Orlando reduced over the flame of wanting to be a family man.

    On his Facebook page, the music man’s vita reads: Husband, Father, Brother, Friend, Musician. Like a recipe, he starts with the base of the dish, and along the way, adds the spice. What’s first is vital: Being the husband, the father. And, what’s added next is the flourish that makes Casano’s life unique. His own. What’s missing from the list is his former life as a chef, and a clearer definition of his present day job as a high school music teacher. All those details are found further down his page.

    “I know a lot of people who are head chefs, executive chefs, especially those who have started their own businesses. When you do it in the very beginning, it is really hard to be away from the business,” said Casano. “So, I went back to school to teach.”

    The 39-year-old Casano got a late start to his current career path, which involves folding musical compositions into the minds of young students by day, splashed with stealing hours away to earn his master’s degree at the University at Albany, and a sprinkle of a few live gigs throughout the Capital District. Casano can still cook up a good meal at home, but he said he walked away from the culinary arts because — would you believe it? — the hours would be more demanding on him. The prospect of trying to start up a restaurant included hours of investing in the kitchen, taking him away from a family life he and his wife had only discussed. Today, the Casano start-up has flourished into a marriage with two kids and a home in Latham.

    Casano enrolled into the College of Saint Rose’s prestigious music program. There, he quickly earned his bachelor’s degree to teach. Last year was his first, full year as a music teacher at Schenectady Public Schools. Though he’s just getting started with a career in music, music has been with him since his parents pushed the piano on him in elementary school. When he protested and asked to play drums instead, they bought him a trumpet.

    “[Drums] were too loud,” said Casano. “They were aware of practice pads. My father thought to play drums I had to have a kit.” So, the trumpet stayed with Casano throughout his high school career. Once he started learning music on his own, “I started kicking myself for not paying attention to those piano lessons.”

    Though Casano is often playing covers at his live shows, he is trained and practiced as a classical guitar player and songwriter, writing both the music and lyrics. Pay attention, and you may recognize a few of his songs as they have played on both 102.7 WEQX and 97.7 WEXT. The pressure of playing solo acts in front of an audience is akin to running a kitchen, said Casano. In both cases, he said, you’re “in the weeds” and focused on your task besides the commotion surrounding him.

    “It’s nerve-wracking,” said Casano, about looping at live shows. “It was awful [starting out]. I’d practice a whole movement, get confident, and get up on stage to play it, ‘Oh, man. Please don’t screw this up.’ … You just learn to go with it. I’ve done theatre. I’ve performed in orchestra and band. You make a mistake, you just keep going. You just play it off like you meant it and keep going, and no one’s the wiser.”

    You can find Casano playing Friday, Aug. 25 at the Saratoga Performing Arts Center, at 5 p.m. and at the Dana Park Concert Series in Albany, on Monday, Aug 28, at 5:30 p.m.

    This article was originally published by The Spot 518 and is the property of Spotlight Newspapers in Albany, N.Y., and appears as a special to NYS Music. TheSpot518 and NYS Music work in partnership to provide readers with in-depth coverage on the local music scene in the Capital District and New York state, respectively. For more, visit TheSpot518.com.

  • Kentucky HeadHunters Grammy Award-Winning Rock Band, Headlines Annual Harley Rendezvous

    Growing up in Metcalfe County, Kentucky, Richard Young was surrounded by music. Known best as the frontman for the Grammy-award winning country rock band, Richard and his brother, Fred, still tends to the same 700 acres of farmland that has been in their family since the Revolutionary War. “We pretend to be farmers,” said Richard. Between the two, they raise about 80 heads of beef cattle. The friends they grew up with are still home, too. Professional farmers, some of whom sharecrop on those 700 acres. Everyone doing something to help out the other.

    As a kid, Richard remembers walking down the road and hearing black sharecroppers belting out gospel music, while younger white workers sung Johnny Cash. At home, his father was apt to play big band records, while mom tuned the radio to the local blues station. His father, John, was a well-respected teacher within the county, where he taught for 39 years. He never traveled more than 400 miles from home, but told stories of Ancient Greece and Rome. When he died, a statue of Aristotle was one of a handful of sculptures he left behind in the backyard — a spectacle to see in rural Kentucky, said Richard.

    On that land is an old farmhouse Richard and the band affectionately call the shack. It was Richard’s grandmother’s. While Richard and Fred were young teenagers, that farmhouse was in little use. Their grandmother kept receiving inquiries on the house. Instead of feeling bad over turning people down, she opened it up to the brothers. There, the Young brothers and their friends could play their music as loud as they wanted in the seclusion of their “psychedelic shack.”

    The boys formed a band and called it Itchy Brother. They headed out with a Southern Rock sound that was growing in popularity with the emergence of Lynyrd Skynyrd, The Allman Brothers and The Outlaws in the early 70s. Earning enough popularity around home, Itchy Brother signed to a label and recorded the single “Shotgun Effie,” with King Fargo Records. But, the window of opportunity for the boys out of Metcalfe wasn’t open for long. The natural progression for all bands began. Members split off, others came on board. The coming of a new decade showed promise. Itchy Brother sign with Swan Records, an independent label started by Led Zeppelin. When John Bonham died that same year, Swan closed operations. Itchy Brother broke up two years later.

    The music never really died for the Young brothers. The two were in Nashville during the Reagan years. Having spent their lives avoiding country and bluegrass, it was the last place they expected to rekindle their careers. To them, Nashville was the heart of country music. Home of the Grand Ol’ Opry. But, they soon learned, there was more to Nashville than Minnie Pearl and her hat.

    “Nashville was only 85 miles from Edmonton (in Metcalfe County),” said Richard, “but it seemed a million miles from where we started. Greg, then Fred, later took jobs as sidemen where their Southern rock skills proved to be handy and exciting to those acts who wanted to follow in the footsteps of Charlie Daniels and Hank Williams, Jr.”

    Richard took a different route by hanging around writing houses. In 1981, with the help of their longtime friend and manager, Mitchell Fox, the boys were signed as writers to Acuff/Rose Publishing Company.

    “Nashville didn’t know it, but there was a roots movement starting to happen, and the ‘No Depression Era’ was just over the hill,” said Richard.

    By the mid-80s, the music scene was shifting. Stadium rock gave way to the Second English Invasion a few years before. Now, that wave was dying down. Audiences were coming back to homegrown talent, and they searched for it in all kinds of genres: R&B, country and rock. That opened another window for the HeadHunter, said bandmember Greg Martin.

    “If you go back and look at the musical diversity going on,” said Martin. “especially the roots and college music scene, even country music was allowing things to happen. Their guards were down. This spilled over into the local scene around here. Bowling Green, Louisville, and Nashville were all hopping, as well as the rest of the country. This had a huge impact on us and helped fuel the formation of the HeadHunters.”

    The Itchy Brothers’ style was back in 1986, but under a new name — Kentucky HeadHunters. In four years, its album “Pickin’ on Nashville” earned the band a Grammy Award in 1990 for Best Country Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal, Best New Vocal Group award from the Academy of Country Music (ACM), and Album of the Year and Vocal Group of the Year awards from the Country Music Association (CMA). In addition, it earned a double-platinum certification from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for shipping two million copies in the United States.

    In 2005, The Kentucky HeadHunters made the first of two albums with Hall of Fame pianist Johnnie Johnson — who also holds the distinction of discovering Chuck Berry, when Johnson introduced the legendary guitarist to his band. Ultimately, as outgoing as Berry was, people assumed the band was his. As Berry’s legend grew through the 1950s, his showmanship took centerstage. But, as Young said, “A lot of people don’t realize, Johnnie had a whole lot to do with those songs in the writing process.” This summer will mark the band’s 49th year since it was formed. Today, Richard describes the band’s timeline in two parts, there’s the band “before Johnnie” and then there’s the band “after Johnnie.”

    In their time “after Johnnie,” the band has gone through a renaissance period. Richard’s son, John Fred Young, is the drummer for Mascot Records’ Black Stone Cherry. The son has done one thing no one else has been able to do in four decades, and that is to get Richard on a plane. As Black Stone Cherry played to huge crowds at three-day music festivals in Europe, he coaxed his father to get the band overseas to join him. Last year, Kentucky HeadHunters played in Sweden, and they all plan to return to Europe this year. This weekend, the HeadHunters play at the three-day Harley Rendezvous Classic festival in Pattersonville, From Friday, June 23 to Sunday, June 25.

    “We’ve lived a charmed life,” said Richard. “We’d go on the road, come back home, hop on a tractor and tend to the farm. Have that release from the music business, and vise versa. We’ve been lucky boys.”

    The shack is now a two-band farmhouse. The HeadHunters share it with John Fred’s Black Stone Cherry. As Richard describes the house, it still has the look of a modest Kentucky farmhouse, but the writing house continues to be a buzz as it did when he and his brother were younger. Someone is playing music, and girls keep coming over to hang out.

    “It all started over again,” said Richard. “The styles are as they were in the early 70s. (Hip-hugging shorts and tube tops.) All these little girls are coming over, and they love me because I’m the old man hanging out.” Richard said it’s as if time has come back in a circle, and he’s able to relive what it was like back when his band was Itchy Brother in 1968. Play music, hang out with the girls, go back home to eat dinner, and right back at it again. But, it’s not quite the same anymore. “What’s funny about it is I’ll get ready to go back down,” said Richard, but his wife said, “You keep your ass here!”

    This article was originally published by The Spot 518. is property of Spotlight Newspapers in Albany, N.Y., and appears as a special to NYS Music. TheSpot518 and NYS Music work in partnership to provide readers with in-depth coverage on the local music scene in the Capital District and New York state, respectively. For more, visit TheSpot518.com.

  • ‘Ambitious’ Festival Planned for ASO Maestro

    The Albany Symphony plans to conclude David Alan Miller’s 25th anniversary season with an “ambitious” arrangement for this year’s American Music Festival.

    david alan miller directorThe American Music Festival includes more than 15 concerts and events between Wednesday, May 31 and Sunday, June 4.

    The 2017 American Music Festival will be the our most ambitious and exciting festival yet,” said Albany Symphony Orchestra’s Music Director David Alan Miller. “It will celebrate the uniqueness of our Capital Region as the gateway to the Erie Canal, as we prepare to kick off the Erie Canal Bicentennial with our magnificent orchestral barge trip from Albany to Buffalo during the first week of July. Even more, it will celebrate the magnificent diversity and richness of living American composers and their music through a myriad of extraordinary and diverse concerts and related activities. We hope our friends and music lovers everywhere will join us for lots of the events to experience the incredible breadth of contemporary musical art being created today. It’s so much fun to just hang out with us and with all our amazing featured creative artists all weekend long.

    This year’s festival, “Water Music,” will include more than 40 new works, including compositions by 2016 Grammy Award-winning composer Michael Daugherty, Christopher Theofanidis, Reena Esmail, Viet Cuong, Saad Haddad, and winners of the “Composer to Center Stage Reading Session” call-for-scores competition.

    Many of the works amplify the festival’s theme, which celebrates the waters that surround us, and advance the ASO’s mission of giving voice to innovative new works, with a particular emphasis on young and emerging composers. Viet Cuong’s newly commissioned work, which will be premiered by the ASO’s new music ensemble, Dogs of Desire, is a programmatic concerto for the percussion quartet inspired by the limitless power of wind, water, and sun, and the technologies that are transforming the way communities generate sustainable energy. Cuong’s premiere is part of the ASO’s continuing partnership with GE Renewable Energy to explore the ways in which the arts, business, and technology can intersect and influence each other.

    In addition to the Dogs of Desire performance on Friday, June 2 and the full orchestra’s signature festival concert on Saturday, June 3, Festival highlights include 16 world premiere performances, “This Land Sings,” a song-cycle by Michael Daugherty inspired by the life and times of Woody Guthrie, a recital by Sandbox Percussion, and the Argus Quartet, performing works by Christopher Theofanidis and Sleeping Giant’s Rob Honstein and Chris Cerrone. T

    The festival will also feature a special preview concert of seven newly commissioned works for “Water Music NY,” the orchestra’s seven-day barge tour and cross-cultural celebration of the bicentennial of New York’s Erie Canal to take place from July 2 to July 8 across New York state. Community events beyond the concert hall include a guided River Walk with the Rensselaer County Historical Society, and a curated poetry reading at Troy Kitchen.

    For information, including how to purchase tickets and festival passes to the American Music Festival, visit albanysymphony.com or call the Albany Symphony Box Office at (518) 694-3300.

    This article was originally published by The Spot 518. is property of Spotlight Newspapers in Albany, N.Y., and appears as a special to NYS Music. TheSpot518 and NYS Music work in partnership to provide readers with in-depth coverage on the local music scene in the Capital District and New York state, respectively. For more, visit TheSpot518.com.